Call me stupid but where is all this racial injustice at any more? I may be dumbest white boy out here. It took me how many years to figger out expiditing so I can make a nice proffet year around .
Apparently it's so pervasive and ubiquitous that you can't even see it.
"Driving While Black" is actually a thing that black people get pulled over for. A black man running while not wearing a sports uniform is probably guilty of something, so he gets stopped and questioned. A black man walking through a white neighborhood while wearing a hoodie, why, he might as well have a target on his shirt. Two white youths walking in the street are ignored by a police officer while two black youths walking in the street are screamed at with profanities by the same officer for doing the same exact thing.
The U.S. criminal justice system is a race-based institution where blacks are directly targeted and punished in a much more aggressive way than white people. People will try and disagree with that, but they can't back it up.
The US has seen a massive surge in arrests and putting people in jail over the last four decades. Most of the reason is the War on Drugs. Yet whites and blacks engage in drug offenses, possession and sales, at virtually the same rates. While blacks 13% of the US population and 14% of monthly drug users they are 37% of the people arrested for drug offenses. That's racial injustice on a grand scale.
The police stop blacks and Latinos at rates that are much higher than whites. In New York City, for example, where people of color make up about half of the population, 80% of the NYPD stops were of blacks and Latinos. When whites were stopped, only 8% were frisked. When blacks and Latinos are stopped 85% were frisked according to information provided by the NYPD. The same is true most other places as well. In a California study, blacks are three times more likely to be stopped than whites.
Once arrested, blacks are more likely to be denied bail and remain in prison awaiting trial than whites. A 1995 review of processing felony arrests found that blacks are 25% more likely to be detained awaiting felony trials than whites facing felony trials. In some cities it's as high as 35%. It should be zero.
Blacks are routinely excluded from criminal jury service according to a June 2010 study released by the American Bar Association. For example in Houston County, Alabama, 8 out of 10 blacks qualified for jury service have been struck by prosecutors from serving on death penalty cases.
Whites are 20% more likely to receive probation for drug offenses, while blacks are 20% more likely to receive jail time. Blacks are also receiving jail sentences which are 20% longer than whites for the same crimes. Whites get a break while blacks get the book thrown at them.
The longer the sentence, the more likely it is that non-white people will be the ones getting it. Two-thirds of the people in the US with life sentences are non-white. In New York, it is 83%.
The US Bureau of Justice Statistics concludes that the chance of a black male born in 2001 of going to jail is 32% or 1 in three. White males have a 6% chance. Thus black boys are five times as likely as white boys to go to jail. The racists among us, while vehemently denying being racist, will simply state that blacks commit more crime, and they will say that while ignoring the stop, frisk, arrest, and conviction numbers above.
But it gets better. Even when released from prison, race continues to dominate. A study by Professor Devah Pager of the University of Wisconsin found that 17% of white job applicants with criminal records received call backs from employers while only 5% of black job applicants with criminal records received call backs. The study showed that race is so prominent that whites with criminal records actually received better treatment than blacks without criminal records.
Finally, the stereotypical example of the joke of blind justice.
Rodney King was a black taxicab driver who, prior to the 1992 Los Angeles riots, was beaten by Los Angeles Police Department officers (Laurence Powell, Timothy Wind, Theodore Briseno and Sergeant Stacey Koon) after being chased for speeding. A bystander, George Holliday, videotaped much of the event. The video was broadcast around the world and shows four LA police officers restraining and repeatedly striking a black man, while four to six other officers stand by watching. For speeding, mind you.
The beating raised a public outrage, which many people found to be clearly racially motivated and gratuitous. Not surprisingly, this raised tensions between the black community and the LAPD. The four officers were tried in a state court for assault with a deadly weapon and use of excessive force. All four were acquitted of using excessive force, and the jury was undecided on the use of a deadly weapon by Powell. This sparked the 1992 Los Angeles riots.
The jury consisted of Ventura County residents — ten whites, one Latino and one Asian. The trial was moved from LA County to Ventura County specifically to obtain the desired racial mix of the jurors, meaning few or no blacks. The jury easily acquitted three of the officers, but could not agree about one of the charges for Powell. On April 29, 1992, only Powell was convicted, of a lesser charge of simple assault.